Chronological notes [electronic resource]: containing the rise, growth and present state of the English congregation of the Order of StBenedict drawn from the archives of the houses of the said congregation at Douay in Flanders, Dieulwart in Lorraine, Paris in France, and . has any rapport to it. Behold the words of the decree. Ut ritum et quodcumque aliud ad mancipatum ejusmodipertinens statim rejiciant. Ut novus hie Beatae Virginis mancipatus omnino aboleaturcontrariis quibuscumque non obstantibus. We are not properly to call ourselves the slaves of anycreature not even of the most glorious


Chronological notes [electronic resource]: containing the rise, growth and present state of the English congregation of the Order of StBenedict drawn from the archives of the houses of the said congregation at Douay in Flanders, Dieulwart in Lorraine, Paris in France, and . has any rapport to it. Behold the words of the decree. Ut ritum et quodcumque aliud ad mancipatum ejusmodipertinens statim rejiciant. Ut novus hie Beatae Virginis mancipatus omnino aboleaturcontrariis quibuscumque non obstantibus. We are not properly to call ourselves the slaves of anycreature not even of the most glorious Mother of God, in takingthat word it its natural sense; for that a slave (according to thenotion that men have formed to themselves of the thing theyunderstand by the word slavery), is so in the power of his masterthat he depends on him without any restriction, which belongs toGod alone, who by the rights of creation and redemption candispose of us as a potter the vessel he hath made, as St. Paul saithin the 9th Chapter of the Romans. Anno 1627, His Holiness gave leave to the President of theEnglish Benedictine Congregation to give power to his Religiousto read forbidden books and absolve the cases in the Bulla Coenoe. * George Colvenerius, to: Kalend. Mariani. *S7. CHAPTER THE FORTIETH. the liberality of the congregation of bursfeldto the English Congregation. The Emperor (Ferdinand II.) having recovered a great tractof ground from the heretics, on which stood many monasteries ofthe Order of St. Benedict, the English Fathers knowing theBursfeldian Congregation to want monks to put into them, peti-tioned them to consider fraternally the case of their affliction andexile, and charitably to stretch their arm to help them. Theworthy Abbot of Arras, Philip Cavarel, writ to the same effect tothe prelates of the German Congregation of Bursfeld, who onthe 18th of May 1628, gave them the Abbey of Cismar in theDiocese of Lubeck and Dukedom of Holsace with all its goods,rights and privil


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectbenedictines, bookyea